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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: May 9, 1988, Volume CXI, No. 19
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: Remembering Bobby. Excerpts from "Robert Kennedy: In His Own Words". Cover: Photo by Burt Glinn.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
RFK's OWN STORY: In the 20 years since his assassination, Robert F. Kennedy has turned into a legend, a man of so many faces, voices and identities that no one can keep track of them all. This week Bobby tells his own story in excerpts from a powerful and dramatic new book. "Robert Kennedy: In His Own Words" is as close to an autobiography as we will ever get. In a series of interviews drawn from the Kennedy Li-' brary, the essential RFK--tough, direct, impatient of fools, ally of underdogs--speaks candidly about the people and events that became Camelot. What emerges is a fascinating self-portrait of a complex political hero thinking, testing and cutting his way through a wide patch of history. In a moving afterword, historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. reflects on what America might look like today if Bobby had lived. Special Report.

A CLOSED DOOR: An effort in Congress to extend the amnesty for illegal aliens failed last week, and immigration agents planned a new crackdown on aliens and their employers. The new immigration law poses added hurdles for legal residence--and it remains to be seen whether it will cut the influx of Mexican aliens. National Affairs.

BALLET BASH: Forty years old this fall, the New York City Ballet is celebrating by throwing itself a birthday party fit for the Guinness Book of World Records: a three-week, $3.4 million festival of American music, dance and art. The Arts.

REACHING OUT: Foster parents' jobs have become more difficult in the last few years as children with increasingly serious problems seek their help. But families who open their doors to children in need find the rewards can be great. Lifestyle.

FULL NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
A miraculous landing.
Last chance for illegal aliens.
In search of an AIDS oasis.
The mob's "me" generation.
INTERNATIONAL:
Gorbachev's weak link.
Old troubles, new threats in Poland.
Afghanistan: Moscow's pullout.
Will Noriega really leave?.
France: thunder on the right.
SPECIAL REPORT:
Remembering Bobby.
Excerpts from "Robert Kennedy: In His Own Words".
What if RFK had lived? by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.
BUSINESS:
The Japanese in America: expatriate blues.
The shinjinrui arrive.
The economy: "New wave" optimism.
NOPEC's business as usual.
Ethics for sale.
Do-it-yourself record albums.
Jane Bryant Quinn.
SOCIETY:
Medicine: Lessons about AIDS.
News Media: Tilting at windmills.
ABC's Mideast peace talks.
Education: No more Animal.
House: Justice: Why reopen a closed case?.
THE ARTS:
Dance: A Yankee Doodle festival.
Books: A zoological soap opera.
"Quinn's Book".
Theater: Checkmate in two acts.
LIFESTYLE:
Family: Foster parents' jobs get harder.
Television: The master of "video verite".
Fashion: WilliWear lives.
DEPARTMENTS:
Periscope.
Update.
My Turn: Eric B. Schnurer.
The Mail.
Perspectives.
Newsmakers.
Transition.
George F. Will.


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